Monday, November 18, 2019
Thursday, October 31, 2019
From Waipahi
Graham White had no reason to believe it was a day different from any other. It was October 20, 1999, and the Dunedin-based train driver had just pulled up his southbound train 919 on the Main South Line at Waipahi Station.
He was just about to jump out of the locomotive to change the mainline points so that northbound train 938 could pass on a parallel section of track diverging from the main line. It was the responsibility of the first train to arrive to set the mainline points for the passing loop.
Unfortunately, the trains arrived at Waipahi Station almost simultaneously and, at 7.02am, train 938 entered the station and collided head-on with train 919, killing Mr White and seriously injuring the driver of train 938.
From 1993
to 2008 New Zealand’s railways were privately owned. The private
owners believed that the marketplace would somehow create safe working
conditions. During that time the following rail workers were killed on the job:
Graham White, Sean Smith, Jack Neha, Peter Silbury, Murray Shaw, Tim Steffert,
Rudolph Wairau, Billy Trouland, Ambrose Manaia, Neil Faithful, Neville Bell,
Robert Burt and Jim Jacobs.
In June
2000 Margaret Wilson the Minister of Labour announced that there would be a
Ministerial Inquiry into these deaths.
On October 2019 a special train traveled from Dunedin to Waipahi where a commemoration of the Waipahi rail
accident and Graham White's death took place.
On the return journey to Dunedin the Rail, Maritime and Transport Union arranged a cab pass so I was able sit up the front with the driver. I took the sketch book with me and scribbled down the changing view as the train rolled through the Southland country side - the drawings seemed to be much improved by the motion of the train.
On the return journey to Dunedin the Rail, Maritime and Transport Union arranged a cab pass so I was able sit up the front with the driver. I took the sketch book with me and scribbled down the changing view as the train rolled through the Southland country side - the drawings seemed to be much improved by the motion of the train.
This series
of six paintings which I’ve called From
Waipahi – in memory of Graham White were developed from the drawings.
Thursday, March 21, 2019
A new exhibition at Whitespace Gallery Auckland
Places
Whitespace Gallery
20 Monmouth St, Grey Lynn
31 March – 26 April, 2019
20 Monmouth St, Grey Lynn
31 March – 26 April, 2019
Preview Sunday 31 March, 2 – 4.30 pm
These paintings form a diary of places I've visited over the last year.
The Volcanoes
From Tawirikoko
These two paintings of volcanic cones are from a trip last September to the Chatham Islands
or Eastern Zealandia, as Hamish Campbel and Chris Adams the geologists who
organized this visit call it. These ancient volcanic cones in the north east of
the main island have spent much of their time under the sea.
Ocean Mail Beach
Further along the northern coast we visited Ocean Mail Beach where the ship Ocean Mail ran aground in 1877. Fortunately the passengers and crew made to shore in the ships long boat.
Down the west coast of the main island winds have piled up huge sand dunes in Petrie Bay. Walking over these to the beach inspired From the Beach to the Lagoon and Over the Dunes, Often a painting is inspired by a particular place and it becomes something else as it is painted, by the time Over the Dunes was finished it seemed to represent a walk to the beach that could be anywhere.Ocean Mail Beach
Further along the northern coast we visited Ocean Mail Beach where the ship Ocean Mail ran aground in 1877. Fortunately the passengers and crew made to shore in the ships long boat.
Shelia Natush in the Kopi Trees
I have had a couple of earlier skirmishes with the police commissioner. The first in an exhibition about the Waihi miners strike and the second in an exhibition about about his invasion of Rua Kenena’s community at Maungapohatu.
Behind the dunes we stopped in a grove of Kopi trees sheltered
from the wind. In New Zealand these trees are called karaka but in the Chathams
they are known by the Moriori word kopi. I had recently completed some
illustrations for ‘No Ordinary Shelia’. Hugh McDonald’s wonderful film about the
writer and illustrator Sheila Natusch that celebrated her long life sharing her
understanding of New Zealand’s nature and history. Sheila had family
connections to the Chathams and I figured she would have liked the kopi grove
so I took the liberty of painting her in Sheila
Natush in the Kopi Trees.
Little Mangare Island and Mangere Island
Rangatira
Mangere Island
The Sisters
Our trip to the Chathams was supposed to include a trip to Pitt
Island. Unfortunately the sea was too rough for the boat trip to so I took the
journey in my imagination helped by a little visual research for the group of
paintings about the Islands.
The Waihou
Earlier in the year I paddled down the Waihou River and explored
some of the coast of the Firth of Thames as research for a young adult novel I
was working on. This journey resulted in The
Waihou and The Puriri Trees.
In the Raupo
On the way back to Wellington I stopped near Tokaanu, took the
kayak off the roof of the car and explored the raupo swamp at the southern end
of the lake.
The dingy on the South Coast
The dingy that first appeared on The Waihou and then again
in The Raupo Swamp mysteriously
turned up again some months later in The
Dingy on the South Coast after a
Sunday walk from Wellington around the coast past Red Rocks.
The Police Commissioners Legacy
A few weekends ago walking off the Desert Road towards Waihohonu I was surrounded by acres pink flowers pushing through the tussock. In 1947 when my father arrived in New Zealand from Scotland he bought with him a collection of Robert Burns poems with a piece of Scottish heather pressed between the pages. He thought he would never see heather again. He didn’t need to worry. The flowering heather that I was walking through came from seeds scattered by Police Commissioner Cullen early last century. He wanted to change the landscape of the Tongariro National Park into an English moorland so that he could dress like a gentleman in his tweed jacket and go shooting the grouse that he had also released. The grouse didn’t survive but the heather did. It is now regarded as an inappropriate weed.I have had a couple of earlier skirmishes with the police commissioner. The first in an exhibition about the Waihi miners strike and the second in an exhibition about about his invasion of Rua Kenena’s community at Maungapohatu.
If you are interested in going to the
Chathams on one of the tours organized by Hamish Campbell and Chris Adams you
can find out more from the Friends of Te Papa website.
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